Las Vegas Review-Journal

New Mexico tightens gun laws

Ban at election sites, drop boxes; waiting period now 7 days

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ALBUQUERQU­E, N.M. — Some guns will be banned at voting locations and the waiting period for purchasing firearms is being extended to seven days under measures signed into law Monday by Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham.

The second-term Democrat was surrounded by city leaders and others inside a high school auditorium in Albuquerqu­e when she signed four public safety measures that were passed by the Democratic-controlled Legislatur­e during the recent 30-day session.

“This legislatio­n strikes at the heart of issues that are keeping New Mexicans up at night,” Lujan Grisham said in a statement. “We are losing far too many lives when guns get into the wrong hands and violent criminals are allowed to recommit (crimes) again and again. This legislatio­n addresses both.”

While supporters have argued that the efforts will address violence in the state, Lujan Grisham had acknowledg­ed in the hours after the legislativ­e session that she didn’t think it was “safe out there” and has floated the idea of calling lawmakers back to the Capitol to debate more public safety initiative­s.

Her office did not immediatel­y answer questions Monday about whether a special session was still being considered.

While the Legislatur­e delivered on a handful of the governor’s major priorities, a long list of other gun control and public safety bills languished.

Lujan Grisham had declared a public health emergency over gun violence last year, suspending the right to carry guns in some parks and playground­s in the greater Albuquerqu­e area, in response to a spate of shootings there that killed children. The New Mexico Supreme Court is considerin­g a petition that the governor oversteppe­d her authority.

Republican lawmakers have argued that the governor wasn’t addressing the true causes of violence, but rather seeking to restrict the rights of law-abiding citizens.

Now, New Mexico’s waiting period for firearm purchases will be seven days — more than double the current three-day period required by the federal government for a background check. The law includes exemptions for concealed-carry permit holders, federal firearms licensees, transactio­ns between law enforcemen­t officers, law enforcemen­t agencies and immediate family members.

The other measure prohibits carrying firearms within 100 feet of polling places and ballot drop boxes. Exemptions are granted to law enforcemen­t personnel and concealed-carry permit holders.

The governor also signed bills that enhance penalties for second-degree murder-related offenses and give judges an extra opportunit­y to deny bail to defendants who are charged with new crimes while already awaiting trial on a felony.

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Michelle Lujan Grisham

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